Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't live in Arlington, but I am a former civil rights attorney. I can give you some context on the confederate names in the county and why they aren't changed even though the county has a lot of people that are from the north and it is very liberal.
When residents or the black community objects to confederate names or symbols today, it is a proxy protest. They aren't so concerned with the names, but to current conditions that they feel aren't fair. Attacking names and symbols brings these issues more upfront into the white communities and focuses the issues of racism and inequality to the front page. They really want better services and opportunities.
In places like Arlington, the black population isn't really oppressed like other counties and the government does more to address their needs than less progressive areas in the state.
So there isn't a need to attack symbols as a sympton of government attitudes and actions towards the black community. The black community in places like this would rather spend money on people that need it vs. re-naming a bunch of buildings and streets.
If the black community really had a legitimate grievance, the Arlington government would do something about it. If the black community wanted the names changed, they would do it. But the costs of new maps, signs, stationary, and the disruption caused to residents and alumni just isn't worth it too them.
I'm amazed at how people in Arlington can be so persuaded of their own liberal tendencies when schools in North Arlington are the whitest in the entire DC region, and Wakefield and some of its feeder schools have some of the highest concentrations of low-income, black and Hispanic residents in the area. Maybe that's just a reflection of housing costs and transportation routes, but you might think that either the schools would be more integrated or people wouldn't use terms like "progressive" so freely to describe themselves.
WTF? W-L has a 59% minority majority. how is that white? Our kids highly regarded elem school is only 55% white and it is one of the top schools nationally.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't live in Arlington, but I am a former civil rights attorney. I can give you some context on the confederate names in the county and why they aren't changed even though the county has a lot of people that are from the north and it is very liberal.
When residents or the black community objects to confederate names or symbols today, it is a proxy protest. They aren't so concerned with the names, but to current conditions that they feel aren't fair. Attacking names and symbols brings these issues more upfront into the white communities and focuses the issues of racism and inequality to the front page. They really want better services and opportunities.
In places like Arlington, the black population isn't really oppressed like other counties and the government does more to address their needs than less progressive areas in the state.
So there isn't a need to attack symbols as a sympton of government attitudes and actions towards the black community. The black community in places like this would rather spend money on people that need it vs. re-naming a bunch of buildings and streets.
If the black community really had a legitimate grievance, the Arlington government would do something about it. If the black community wanted the names changed, they would do it. But the costs of new maps, signs, stationary, and the disruption caused to residents and alumni just isn't worth it too them.
I'm amazed at how people in Arlington can be so persuaded of their own liberal tendencies when schools in North Arlington are the whitest in the entire DC region, and Wakefield and some of its feeder schools have some of the highest concentrations of low-income, black and Hispanic residents in the area. Maybe that's just a reflection of housing costs and transportation routes, but you might think that either the schools would be more integrated or people wouldn't use terms like "progressive" so freely to describe themselves.
Anonymous wrote:I don't live in Arlington, but I am a former civil rights attorney. I can give you some context on the confederate names in the county and why they aren't changed even though the county has a lot of people that are from the north and it is very liberal.
When residents or the black community objects to confederate names or symbols today, it is a proxy protest. They aren't so concerned with the names, but to current conditions that they feel aren't fair. Attacking names and symbols brings these issues more upfront into the white communities and focuses the issues of racism and inequality to the front page. They really want better services and opportunities.
In places like Arlington, the black population isn't really oppressed like other counties and the government does more to address their needs than less progressive areas in the state.
So there isn't a need to attack symbols as a sympton of government attitudes and actions towards the black community. The black community in places like this would rather spend money on people that need it vs. re-naming a bunch of buildings and streets.
If the black community really had a legitimate grievance, the Arlington government would do something about it. If the black community wanted the names changed, they would do it. But the costs of new maps, signs, stationary, and the disruption caused to residents and alumni just isn't worth it too them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: Compare TC to W-L and its remarkable thy are so high overall given the pool.
All the hyperbole in these posts is crazy. While I'm sure TC Williams and Alexandria schools are doing a pretty good job overall, TC and W-L do not make a good comparison. TC has a higher low-income and ESL population. TC is similar to Wakefield in terms of demographics, standardized test scores and the college readiness index. Comparing TC to W-L and saying they both beat the odds (to paraphrase) with great test scores is very misleading.
Anonymous wrote: Compare TC to W-L and its remarkable thy are so high overall given the pool.
Anonymous wrote:Personally, I'm happy with the considerable diversity at Yorktown, the fact that minority students do better at our school than at other schools in Arlington, and the fact that we don't argue, like the W-L parents, that test scores should be "controlled" to exclude the non-white students. White parents at W-L are the last people on earth who should be accusing others of racism. Your entire pitch seems to be aimed at recruiting more wealthy whites to the W-L neighborhoods by suggesting only their kids will matter there and the kids who struggle are just background noise.